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Index
About the author Reviews Foreword Dedication Introduction 1. How Students Think and Learn
1.1. A simple model of thinking and learning 1.2. Experts and Novices 1.3. What are they thinking about? 1.4. Expanding working memory capacity 1.5. Methods that last 1.6. Maths anxiety 1.7. If I only remember 3 things…
2. Motivation
2.1. Models of Motivation 2.2. Do students make good decisions? 2.3. Real-life Maths 2.4. Teacher influence 2.5. Providing a Purpose 2.6. Rewards and Sanctions 2.7. Why struggle and failure aren’t always good – Part 1 2.8. Achievement and Motivation 2.9. If I only remember 3 things…
3. Explicit Instruction
3.1. What makes great teaching? 3.2. Are some students natural mathematicians? 3.3. When and why less guidance does not work 3.5. Teaching lower achieving students 3.6. Story structure 3.7. Analogies 3.8. Cognitive conflict 3.9. How before Why 3.10. Ending on a high 3.11. If I only remember 3 things...
4. Focusing Thinking
4.1. Cognitive Load Theory and the Cognitive Theory of Multimedia Learning 4.2. When silly mistakes may not be that silly 4.3. The Modality Effect 4.4. Learning styles 4.5. The Goal-free Effect 4.6. The Split-Attention Effect 4.7. The Redundancy Effect 4.8. Silent teacher 4.9. Germane Load 4.10. If I only remember 3 things…
5. Self-Explanations
5.1. The Self-Explanation Effect 5.2. Making the most of self-explanations 5.3. If I only remember 3 things…
6. Making the most of Worked Examples
6.1. The Worked Example Effect 6.2. Example-Problem Pairs 6.3. Labels 6.4. Supercharged Worked Examples 6.5. Mistakes in Worked Examples 6.6. Fading 6.7. The Expertise Reversal Effect 6.8. If I only remember 3 things…
7. Choice of Examples and Practice Questions
7.1. Examples v Definitions 7.2. Examples v Rules 7.3. Boundary examples 7.4. Same Surface, Different Deep Problems 7.5. Ambiguous answers 7.6. Ambiguous questions 7.7. Extension questions 7.8. Minimally different examples and Intelligent Practice 7.9. If I only remember 3 things…
8. Deliberate Practice
8.1. Breaking it down 8.2. The five stages of Deliberate Practice 8.3. Practice v final performance 8.4. Three reasons to always give students the answers 8.5. If I only remember 3 things…
9. Problem-Solving and Independence
9.1. What is a problem? 9.2. Why are some students bad at problem-solving… 9.3. …and what can we do about it? 9.4. Why struggle and failure aren’t always good – Part 2 9.5. Independent learners 9.6. If I only remember 3 things…
10. Purposeful Practice
10.1. The most difficult part of teaching 10.2. What is Purposeful Practice? 10.3. If I only remember 3 things…
11. Formative Assessment and Diagnostic Questions
11.1. What is formative assessment and why is it important? 11.2. Classroom Culture 11.3. What is a Diagnostic Question? 11.4. What makes a good question 11.5. How to ask and respond 11.6. When to ask a diagnostic question 11.7. Seven common criticisms of multiple-choice questions 11.8. Anticipating mistakes and misconceptions 11.9. The benefits of teachers writing questions 11.10. If I only remember 3 things…
12. Long-term Memory and Desirable Difficulties
12.1. How long-term memory works 12.2. The problem with performance 12.3. The Spacing Effect 12.4. The Interleaving Effect 12.5. The Variation Effect 12.6. The Testing Effect 12.7. The many, many other benefits of tests 12.8. Low-stakes quizzes 12.9. The Pretest Effect 12.10. Delaying and reducing feedback 12.11. If I only remember 3 things…
Conclusion Acknowledgements
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